@article {26786, title = {Combating QAnon Conspiracies with Social Welfare Programs}, year = {2021}, author = {Emily Yates-Doerr} } @inbook {21241, title = {Co-Producing World Cinema: Germany and Transnational Film Production}, booktitle = {Transnational German Studies}, year = {2020}, pages = {133-150}, publisher = {Liverpool University Press}, organization = {Liverpool University Press}, address = {Liverpool}, abstract = {

"This volume consists of a series of essays, written by leading scholars within the field, demonstrating the types of inquiry that can be pursued into the transnational realities underpinning German-language culture and history as these travel right around the globe. Contributions discuss the inherent cross-pollination of different languages, times, places and notions of identity within German-language cultures and the ways in which their construction and circulation cannot be contained by national or linguistic borders. In doing so, it is not the aim of the volume to provide a compendium of existing transnational approaches to German Studies or to offer its readers a series of survey chapters on different fields of study to date. Instead, it offers novel research-led chapters that pose a question, a problem or an issue through which contemporary and historical transcultural and transnational processes can be seen at work. Accordingly, each essay isolates a specific area of study and opens it up for exploration, providing readers, especially student readers, not just with examples of transnational phenomena in German language cultures but also with models of how research in these areas can be configured and pursued. Contributors: Angus Nicholls, Anne Fuchs, Benedict Schofield, Birgit Lang, Charlotte Ryland, Claire Baldwin, Dirk Weissmann, Elizabeth Anderson, James Hodkinson, Nicholas Baer, Paulo Soethe, Rebecca Braun, Sara Jones, Sebastian Heiduschke, Stuart Taberner and Ulrike Draesner"--

}, keywords = {Germany -- Civilization, Transnationalism}, author = {Sebastian Heiduschke} } @article {26661, title = {The Cruelty of War: Repairing COVID-19 Through Healing and Care}, year = {2020}, author = {Emily Yates-Doerr} } @article {26301, title = {Cultures of Nutrition: Classification, Food Policy, and Health}, journal = {Medical Anthropology}, year = {2020}, month = {12/2020}, author = {Emily Yates-Doerr} } @article {26486, title = {Cortes de carne: desenredando natureza-culturas ocidentais [tradu{\c c}{\~a}o de {\textquotedblleft}Cuts of meat: disentangling western nature-cultures{\textquotedblright}]}, journal = {Tecnologia e Sociedad}, volume = {15}, year = {2019}, author = {Emily Yates-Doerr} } @article {26501, title = {Counting bodies? On future engagements with science studies in medical anthropology}, journal = {Anthropology \& Medicine}, volume = {24}, year = {2017}, month = {07/2017}, chapter = {142}, author = {Emily Yates-Doerr} } @article {5666, title = {Constructing a Social Justice Tour: Pedagogy, Race, and Student Learning through Geography}, journal = {Journal of Geography}, volume = {115}, year = {2016}, keywords = {ethnic studies, geography, pedagogy, race, social justice, tour}, doi = {10.1080/00221341.2016.1153132}, author = {Natchee Barnd} } @article {6201, title = {Cultural Adjustment from the Other Side: Korean Students{\textquoteright} Experiences with their Sojourner-Teachers}, journal = {China Media Studies}, volume = {12}, year = {2016}, month = {01/2016}, pages = {35-45}, chapter = {35}, abstract = {

Traditional research on cultural adjustment focuses on the sojourner{\textquoteright}s experience within a foreign country. Sojourners never travel or move into a vacuum, however, and the missing component of such a focus is the experience of those who come into contact with these sojourners. In order to demonstrate the need to expand research on cultural adaptation, results from a case study are presented. The context for the case study is English language education in South Korea. Narratives of experience were collected from 26 South Korean university students based on their interaction with native-English-speaking teachers. Results demonstrate that students experience aspects of cultural adjustment when involved in interactions within the classroom setting.

}, url = {http://www.chinamediaresearch.net/readmore/vol12no1/CMR160105.jpg}, author = {Root, E.} } @article {4676, title = {Christian Fragility}, number = {07/02/2015}, year = {2015}, publisher = {Huffington Post}, type = {Web article}, url = {http://www.huffingtonpost.com/susan-m-shaw/christian-fragility_b_7700418.html}, author = {Susan Shaw} } @inbook {21256, title = {Cinematic Reflections of Germany{\textquoteright}s Postunification Woes: Architecture and Urban Space of Frankfurt (Oder) in Halbe Treppe, Lichter and Kombat Sechzehn}, booktitle = {Bloom and Bust: Urban Landscapes in the East since German reunificaiton}, year = {2015}, pages = {67-87}, publisher = {Berghahn Books}, organization = {Berghahn Books}, author = {Sebastian Heiduschke} } @article {3254, title = {Comparative Institutional Advantage in Europe{\textquoteright}s Sovereign Debt Crisis}, journal = {Comparative Political Studies}, volume = {48}, year = {2015}, author = {AL Johnston and Hanck{\'e}, R and Pant, S} } @article {26746, title = {Care: Provocation}, year = {2014}, author = {Emily Yates-Doerr} } @article {26756, title = {CeSSIAM Bulletin, Editorial}, year = {2014}, author = {Emily Yates-Doerr} } @inbook {21231, title = {Communists and Cosmonauts in Mystery Science Theater 3000: De-Camping East Germany{\textquoteright}s First Spaceship on Venus/Silent Star}, booktitle = {In the Peanut Gallery with Mystery Science Theater 3000: Essays on Film, Fandom, Technology and the Culture of Riffing}, year = {2014}, pages = {40-45}, publisher = {McFarland}, organization = {McFarland}, author = {Sebastian Heiduschke} } @inbook {26636, title = {Complex Carbohydrates: On the Relevance of Ethnography in Nutrition Education}, booktitle = {Contours of Eating: New Relations between Food and Bodies}, year = {2013}, author = {Emily Yates-Doerr} } @article {4377, title = {Construyendo Soberan{\'\i}a Alimentaria: Una Vista Desde Oregon, EEUU}, year = {2012}, abstract = {

Second International Forum on Organic Agriculture and Agroecology, Guayaquil, Ecuador. October 18, 2012.

}, author = {Joan Gross} } @article {27136, title = {Counterstories of college persistence by undocumented Mexicana students: Navigating race, class, gender, and legal status}, journal = {International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education }, volume = {25}, year = {2012}, abstract = {

This paper draws from four sets of four in-depth interviews and one subsequent focus group to examine how undocumented Mexicana students navigate identities and the meanings of race, gender, class, and legal status. We mobilize a critical race theory framework to center and explore the content of students{\textquoteright} counterstories. While majoritarian stories perpetuate stereotypical narratives that portray communities of color as culturally deficient, counterstorytelling creates a space for exposing and resisting hegemonic narratives in the home, community, and college settings. We argue that, through counterstories, Mexicana students are able to develop a positive self-image that allows them to hang on to their academic aspirations, to persist in college, and to envision and pursue the possibility of success. We look at how undocumented Mexicana students{\textquoteright} narratives also reproduce and/or reinscribe elements of oppressive discourses of race, class, and gender in the contemporary USA. We consider some implications of our discussion of counterstories for educational theory and policy.

}, author = {Susana Mar{\'\i}a Mu{\~n}oz and Marta Maria Maldonado} } @article {26531, title = {Cuts of Meat: Disentangling Western Nature-Cultures}, journal = {Cambridge Anthropology}, volume = {30}, year = {2012}, chapter = {48}, author = {Emily Yates-Doerr} } @article {26766, title = {CeSSIAM Bulletin, Editorial}, year = {2011}, author = {Emily Yates-Doerr} } @article {4379, title = {Challenges of healthy eating among low income youth in Western Oregon: Preliminary Findings of the Ten Rivers Food Web Community Food Assessment}, year = {2011}, abstract = {

Agriculture, Food and Human Values, Society for the Anthropology of Food and Nutrition and Association for the Study of Food and Society annual meeting, Missoula, MT.\  June 10, 2011

}, author = {Joan Gross} } @book {3128, title = {Civil society in Russia : state society relations in the post-Yeltsin era}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {National Council for Eurasian and East European Research}, organization = {National Council for Eurasian and East European Research}, address = {Seattle, WA}, author = {Sarah L. Henderson and National Council for Eurasian and East European Research (U.S.),} } @article {26761, title = {Complex Carbohydrates}, year = {2011}, author = {Emily Yates-Doerr} } @article {4335, title = {Constructing a Community Food Economy}, journal = {Food and Foodways}, volume = {19}, year = {2011}, author = {Joan Gross} } @conference {3280, title = {China learns from the Soviet Union, 1949-present}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Lexington Books}, organization = {Lexington Books}, address = {Lanham, Md.}, isbn = {9780739142226 0739142224}, author = {Hua-Yu Li and Bernstein, Thomas P.} } @article {3072, title = {Competing with her Mother-In-Law: The Intersection of Control Management and Emotion Management in Sport Families}, journal = {Studies in symbolic interaction.}, volume = {35}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, pages = {319 - 344}, publisher = {Jai Press.}, address = {Greenwich, Conn}, isbn = {0163-2396}, author = {Steven M. Ortiz} } @article {4339, title = {Captalism and its Discontents: Back-to-the-Lander and Freegan Foodways in Rural Oregon}, volume = {17}, year = {2009}, pages = {57-79}, author = {Joan Gross} } @article {2982, title = {Criminal Punishment, Labor Market Outcomes, and Economic Inequality: Devah Pager{\textquoteright}s Marked: Race, Crime, and Finding Work in an Era of Mass Incarceration}, journal = {Law \& Social Inquiry}, volume = {34}, year = {2009}, month = {2009///}, pages = {1039 - 1060}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishing}, abstract = {

A growing empirical literature examines the role of incarceration in labor market outcomes and economic inequality more broadly. Devah Pager{\textquoteright}s book, Marked: Race, Crime, and Finding Work in an Era of Mass Incarceration (2007), offers compelling evidence that employment opportunities for former prisoners-especially black former prisoners-are bleak. I review Pager{\textquoteright}s methods and findings, place them in the context of previous work, and discuss the relation of race to a criminal record. I then explore several lines of related research that investigate the increasing reach of criminal punishment into various social realms. One goal of this essay is to draw research on economic inequality into the law and society literature.

}, isbn = {0897-6546}, author = {Brett C. Burkhardt} } @article {3114, title = {Candidates Need to Address Issue of Indebtedness}, journal = {Statesman Journal}, year = {2008}, month = {03/2008}, author = {David Bernell} } @article {2996, title = {Coastal ecosystem-based management with nonlinear ecological functions and values.}, journal = {Science (New York, N.Y.)}, volume = {319}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, pages = {321 - 3}, abstract = {

A common assumption is that ecosystem services respond linearly to changes in habitat size. This assumption leads frequently to an "all or none" choice of either preserving coastal habitats or converting them to human use. However, our survey of wave attenuation data from field studies of mangroves, salt marshes, seagrass beds, nearshore coral reefs, and sand dunes reveals that these relationships are rarely linear. By incorporating nonlinear wave attenuation in estimating coastal protection values of mangroves in Thailand, we show that the optimal land use option may instead be the integration of development and conservation consistent with ecosystem-based management goals. This result suggests that reconciling competing demands on coastal habitats should not always result in stark preservation-versus-conversion choices.

}, isbn = {0036-8075}, author = {Lori A Cramer and Barbier EB and Koch EW and Silliman BR and Hacker SD and Wolanski E and Primavera J and Granek EF and Polasky S and Aswani S and Stoms DM and Kennedy CJ and Bael D, and Kappel CV and Perillo GM and Reed DJ} } @article {3015, title = {Children as Religious Resources: The Role of Children in the Social Re-Formation of Class, Culture, and Religious Identity}, journal = {Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion}, volume = {46}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {169 - 183}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishing}, abstract = {

Based on observations and interviews in two churches representing two different strands of American Protestantism, I assess the ways in which children contribute to the social construction of class, culture, and religious identity for adults. Evidence comes from observing how congregations incorporate children into adult worship services and talk about them in texts and programs, and from the ways in which newer and long-term congregation members describe valuing and understanding children{\textquoteright}s ministries. These styles and their meanings reflect the history, heritage, and theological distinctives of these two strands of American Protestantism. Religion, I suggest, is not just good for children; children themselves are a religious resource whose presence in worship, service, and discourse helps to create and maintain a sense of identity, place, and meaning in the lives of worshipping adults.

}, isbn = {0021-8294}, author = {Sally K. Gallagher} } @inbook {3275, title = {Communicating Democracy. Entering the American Republic Through The West Wing or the Commander in Chief}, booktitle = {Picturing America. Trauma, Realism, Politics and Identity in American Visual Culture}, year = {2007}, pages = {131-149}, url = {http://www2.rz.hu-berlin.de/amerika/asc/publications/pa_kneis.html}, author = {Philipp Kneis and Dallmann, Antje and Reinhard Isensee} } @inbook {3092, title = {The Caribbean Community in Canada: Transnational Connections and Transformation}, booktitle = {Negotiating Borders and Belonging: Transnational Identities and Practices in Canada}, year = {2006}, pages = {130-149}, publisher = {University of British Columbia Press}, organization = {University of British Columbia Press}, author = {Dwaine Plaza and Simmons, A. and Wong, Lloyd and Vic Satzewich} } @article {3104, title = {The Construction of a Segmented Hybrid Identity Among One-and-a-Half-Generation and Second-Generation Indo-Caribbean and African Caribbean Canadians}, journal = {Identity}, volume = {6}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, pages = {207 - 229}, publisher = {Taylor \& Francis}, abstract = {

Using data from life history interviews collected from a 2000 Centre of Excellence for Research on Immigration and Settlement-funded research project, this article examines the role that family, the community, and the environment have played in the identity formation of one-and-a-half-generation and second-generation Indo-Caribbean and African Caribbean Canadians. Findings from this research suggest that ethnic identity formation in Canada for young people involves a fluid and complex interplay of culture, environment, and community. Ethnic identity for this particular group is a dynamic, situational, and changing process. The experiences of ethnicity are also shaped largely by rules and practices in past and present relationships. For one-and-a-half-generation and second-generation Caribbean Canadians, this process may be understood as a stage in the immigration life cycle, a stage characterized by constant shifting and assembling of new hybridized identities, ones that are based primarily on physical appearance and closeness to the dominant group in terms of social and cultural capital.

}, isbn = {1528-3488}, author = {Dwaine Plaza} } @article {2894, title = {Corruption, competition and democracy}, journal = {Journal of Development Economics}, volume = {81}, year = {2006}, month = {2006///}, pages = {193 - 212}, abstract = {

This paper presents a model of the interaction between corrupt government officials and industrial firms to show that corruption is antithetical to competition. It is hypothesized that a government agent that controls access to a formal market has a self-interest in demanding a bribe payment that serves to limit the number of firms. This corrupt official will also be subject to a detection technology that is a function of the amount of the bribe payment and the number of firms that pay it. Under quite normal assumptions about the shape of the graph of the detection function, multiple equilibria can arise where one equilibrium is characterized by high corruption and low competition, and another is characterized by low corruption and high competition. Some suggestive empirical evidence is presented that supports the main hypothesis that competition and corruption are negatively related.

}, isbn = {0304-3878}, author = {Patrick M. Emerson} } @article {3022, title = {County child poverty rates in the US: a spatial regression approach}, journal = {Population Research and Policy Review}, volume = {25}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, pages = {369 - 391}, publisher = {Springer}, abstract = {

We apply methods of exploratory spatial data analysis (ESDA) and spatial regression analysis to examine intercounty variation in child poverty rates in the US. Such spatial analyses are important because regression models that exclude explicit specification of spatial effects, when they exist, can lead to inaccurate inferences about predictor variables. Using county-level data for 1990, we re-examine earlier published results [Friedman and Lichter (Popul Res Policy Rev 17:91-109, 1998)]. We find that formal tests for spatial autocorrelation among county child poverty rates confirm and quantify what is obvious from simple maps of such rates: the risk of a child living in poverty is not (spatially) a randomly distributed risk at the county level. Explicit acknowledgment of spatial effects in an explanatory regression model improves considerably the earlier published regression results, which did not take account of spatial autocorrelation. These improvements include: (1) the shifting of "wrong sign" parameters in the direction originally hypothesized by the authors, (2) a reduction of residual squared error, and (3) the elimination of any substantive residual spatial autocorrelation. While not without its own problems and some remaining ambiguities, this reanalysis is a convincing demonstration of the need for demographers and other social scientists to examine spatial autocorrelation in their data and to explicitly correct for spatial externalities, if indicated, when performing multiple regression analyses on variables that are spatially referenced. Substantively, the analysis improves the estimates of the joint effects of place-influences and family-influences on child poverty.

}, isbn = {0167-5923}, author = {Roger B. Hammer and Voss, Paul and Long, David and Friedman, Samantha} } @article {3292, title = {Court Size and Diversity on the Bench: The Ninth Circuit and its Sisters}, journal = {Arizona Law Review}, volume = {48}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, pages = {247 - 266}, isbn = {0004-153X}, author = {Rorie Solberg} } @article {3294, title = {Communicating to the courts and beyond: Why members of Congress participate as amici curiae}, journal = {SAGE Public Administration Abstracts}, volume = {32}, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, abstract = {

Members of Congress engage in discretionary behaviors, such as making speeches and cosponsoring bills, which are generally motivated by either electoral needs or policy preferences. We examine a discretionary behavior that engages the judicial branch in the conversation: the participation of members of Congress as amici curiae before the Supreme Court. Amicus curiae briefs provide members of Congress with a direct avenue of communication with the judiciary, and this characteristic suggests that cosigning would be a method of creating good public policy. Using data from the 1980-1997 terms of the Supreme Court, however, we find that members of Congress cosign onto amicus curiae briefs as a means of "taking stances," akin to cosponsoring a bill. The action allows the member to speak indirectly to an audience beyond these governmental institutions. Evidence shows that ideological extremism and committee jurisdiction promote participation as amicus curiae.

}, isbn = {0094-6958}, author = {Rorie Solberg and Heberlig, E.} } @inbook {3094, title = {Caribbean Migration to Canada: Mobility and Opportunity 1900-2001}, booktitle = {Beyond the Blood, The Beach and the Banana: New Perspectives in Caribbean Studies}, year = {2004}, publisher = {Ian Randal Publisher}, organization = {Ian Randal Publisher}, author = {Dwaine Plaza and Sandra Courtman} } @article {3095, title = {Camaraderie and Hierarchy in College Football: A Content Analysis of Team Photographs}, journal = {Sociology of Sport On Line}, volume = {5}, year = {2002}, chapter = {http://physed.otago.ac.nz/sosol/v5i2/v5i2.html}, author = {Dwaine Plaza and Kathleen Stanley} } @article {3067, title = {Constructing Dependency in Coping with Stressful Occupational Events: At What Cost for Wives of Professional Athletes?}, journal = {Sociology of Sport Online}, volume = {5}, year = {2002}, month = {Nov-Dec}, author = {Steven M. Ortiz} } @article {3018, title = {Connections and Constraints: The Effects of Children on Caregiving}, journal = {JOMF Journal of Marriage and Family}, volume = {63}, year = {2001}, month = {2001}, pages = {265 - 275}, abstract = {

This article assesses the effects of children on parents{\textquoteright} involvement in caregiving. On the basis of interviews with 273 respondents, we address the effects of having children on care given to kin and nonkin; assess the effects of children{\textquoteright}s characteristics, especially age and gender, on the help mothers and fathers provide; and examine how these vary with mothers{\textquoteright} employment. Overall, we find that the presence of children connects parents into networks of care more than it constrains them. The effects vary depending on the characteristics of the child (including age and gender) as well as characteristics of the parent (like gender and employment).

}, isbn = {0022-2445}, author = {Sally K. Gallagher and Gerstel, Naomi} } @inbook {2991, title = {Community infrastructure and the development of human capital: A Pacific view}, booktitle = {Change and Resilience in Fishing}, year = {2000}, pages = {57-68}, publisher = {Oregon Sea Grant Publishers}, organization = {Oregon Sea Grant Publishers}, address = {Corvallis, OR}, author = {Lori A Cramer and Susan Hanna and Madeleine Hall-Arber} } @article {2992, title = {Changing public values: Consequences for Pacific northwest forestry}, journal = {Journal of Applied Forestry}, volume = {13}, year = {1999}, pages = {28-34}, author = {Shindler, B and Lori A Cramer} } @article {3071, title = {Clinical Typifications by Wives of Professional Athletes: The Field Researcher as Therapist}, journal = {Clinical sociology review.}, year = {1994}, month = {1994}, pages = {48}, publisher = {Clinical Sociology Association}, address = {Providence, R.I.}, isbn = {0730-840X}, author = {Steven M. Ortiz} } @article {2997, title = {Changing Forest Service Values and Their Implications for Land Management Decisions Affecting Resource-Dependent Communities.}, journal = {Rural Sociology}, volume = {58}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, pages = {475 - 91}, abstract = {

A nationwide survey of U.S. Forest Service employees examined values and management priorities across employment levels. Compared to agency policies, respondents gave higher priorities to noncommodity uses of national forests, such as recreation and wildlife. This disparity of opinion was greatest among new district rangers, who were more educated and more varied in background than other respondents. (SV)

}, isbn = {0036-0112}, author = {Lori A Cramer} } @article {4370, title = {Creative Use of Language in a Li{\'e}ge Puppet Theater}, journal = {Semiotica}, volume = {47}, year = {1983}, pages = {281-315}, author = {Joan Gross} }